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MNG2601: GENERAL MANAGEMENT
CH1 Introduction to Management p3Introduction p4All organisations utilise societies’ scarce resources, namely:
# Scarce Resource Academic Name1 People Human resources2 Money Capital3 Raw materials Physical resources4 Knowledge Information resources
Business Organisations and Managers p5The ways in which organisations serve society: they bring together the resources of a nation to produce the goods and services it needs.
The Nature of Management p6The 4 fundamental management functions:
# Management Function1 Planning2 Organising3 Leading4 Controlling
Learn Table 1.1: The basic resources of an organisation p7
The interactive nature of the management process: the external environment:
# Function Description1 Planning Managers determine the organisation’s vision, mission and goals
and decide on a strategy to achieve them2 Organising Managers group activities together, establish authority, allocate
resources, and delegate3 Leading Managers direct and motivate members of the organisation to
achieve the mission and goals4 Controllin
gManagers monitor progress and take corrective steps to reach the mission and goals
A Definition of Management p8Management is the process of planning, organising, leading, and controlling the scarce resources of the organisation to achieve the organisation’s mission and goals as productively as possible.
# Function Description1 Planning The management function that determines where the
organisation wants to be in the future: vision, mission, goals
Strategic plans: made by top management, 5-10 years Tactical plans: made by functional managers Operational plans: made by lower management, shorter
term plans i.e. daily, weekly, monthly2 Organising Allocation of human resources
Tasks, roles and responsibilities are defined Development of a framework or organisational structure Organisational design: management must match the
organisation’s structure to its strategies3 Leading Directing the human resources of the organisation and
motivating them in such a way that they will be willing to work productively to reach the organisation’s mission and goals
Managers are responsible for getting things done through other people
Leading the organisation means making use of influence and power to motivate employees to achieve organisational goals
4 Controlling
Managers should constantly make sure that the organisation is on the right course to reach its goals
The aim of control is to monitor actual results against planned results
Different Levels and Kinds of Management in the Organisation p10Managers are usually classified into 2 categories p10:
# Category Description1 According to their level in the
organisationTop, middle, lower or first-line
2 By the functional or specialist area of management for which they are responsible
The functional managers i.e. marketing manager, finance manager, operations, human resources, research and development etc.
Top management p10:
# Responsibility1 Responsible for the organisation as a whole2 Includes board of directors, partners, managing director, chief executives3 Responsible for determining the mission, vision, goals and overall strategies
of the entire organisation
4 Concerned with long-term planning, designing the organisation’s broad organisation structure, leading the organisation, and monitoring (controlling) its overall performance
Middle management p11:
# Responsibility1 Responsible for specific departments of the organisation2 Includes functional heads such as financial manager, marketing manager etc.3 Primarily concerned with implementing the strategic plan formulated by top
management4 Responsible for medium-term planning (the near future) and leads by means
of the department heads5 Continually monitor environmental influences that may affect their own
departments
Lower/first-line management p11:
# Responsibility1 Responsible for smaller segments of the organisation e.g.: the different
sections2 Includes supervisors or foremen3 Deal with the monthly, weekly and daily management of their sections4 Ensure the plans made my middle management are implemented5 The primary concern of a supervisor is to apply policies, procedures and rules
to achieve a high level of productivity in his/her section, to provide technical assistance, to motivate subordinates, and to ensure that the section’s goals are reached
Learn the areas of management p12
The Role Distribution of Managers p14Henry Mintzberg, a famous theorist, came to the conclusion that managers play about 10 different roles i.e. the overlapping role distribution of managers:
# Category Description1 Interpersonal role Figurehead2 Leader3 Relationship builder4 Information role Monitor5 Analyser6 Spokesperson7 Decision-making role Entrepreneur8 Problem solver9 Allocator of resources
10
Negotiator
Managerial Skills and Competencies at Various Managerial Levels p15The 3 major skills needed by managers at all levels and in all departments and sections of the organisation are:
# Skill Description1 Conceptual The mental ability to view the
organisation and its parts holistically. Involves the manager’s thinking and planning abilities
2 Interpersonal The ability to work with people3 Technical The ability to use the knowledge or
techniques of a specific discipline to reach specific goals
Learn Figure 1.6 Managerial skills needed at various managerial levels p16
A competency in managerial skills refers to the necessary:
# Competency1 Knowledge2 Skills3 Value orientation
Management and Organisational Performance p18# Theory Description1 The fundamental economic
principleAchieving the highest possible satisfaction of needs with scarce resources
2 The task of management in a free-market economy
To manage in such a way that the organisation makes a sustainable profit, that is, earns the highest possible income with the lowest possible costs
3 The triple bottom line Run the organisation as profitably as possible with due responsibility of the organisation towards the community, as well as the environment for which it needs to care
CH2 The Evolution of Management Theory p27Understanding the Different Management Theories p30The environmental forces that shape management thought:
# Environmental Force1 Social2 Ecological3 International4 Technological5 Economic6 Political
The key elements of productivity are:
# Element of Productivity1 The outcome is continuous improvement of performance2 The improvement must be measurable3 The key drivers of productivity are:
Effectiveness Efficiency Utilisation Elimination of all forms of
waste
Doing the right thingsDoing things the right wayOptimum use of human capital and physical resources
4 The benefits of productivity must be: The environment The economy Society
The Theories of Management p30There are 2 main schools of thought:
# School of Thought Description1 Classical approaches2 Contemporary approaches3 The eclectic approach Borrowing management principles
from different theories as dictated by circumstance
Learn Figure 2.2: The evolution of management theory p32
The Classical Approaches p32The main limitations of the classical approaches:
# Limitation1 They ignored the relationship between the organisation and its external
environment2 They focused on specific aspects of the organisation at the expense of other
considerations
Scientific Management School p34
# Fact Description1 Founded by Frederick W. Taylor
2 What he studied Studied individual workers to see exactly how they performed their tasks
3 Premise There is 1 best way to perform any task and measure everything that is measurable - known as time-motion-study
4 Problem he addressed
How to judge whether an employee had put in a fair day’s work
5 Limitations Workers cannot be viewed simply as parts of a smoothly running machine
Money is not the only motivator of employees Creates the potential for exploitation of labour i.e.
possible strikes by workers Can lead to ignorance of the relationship between the
organisation and its changing external environment as the focus remains on internal issues i.e. the workers and their productivity
6 Belief Money motivates workers
The 3 fundamental things he taught:
# Fundamental Lesson1 Find the best practice wherever it exists – today we call it “benchmarking”2 Decompose the task into its constituent elements – we call it “business
process redesign”3 Get rid of things that don’t add value
Summary:
# Summary1 Summary: scientific management focused on the issue of managing work – not
on managing people2 Focus: ways to improve the individual worker
The Process or Administrative Approach p34# Fact Description1 Founded by Henri Fayol2 What he studied Administrative side of operations3 Premise There are 5 basic functions of administration: planning,
organising, commanding, coordinating, and controlling4 Limitation Postulates that formal authority should be maintained by
managers5 Belief Management is a skill – something that one can learn
once its underlying principles are understood6 Focus Focuses on managing the total organisation
Learn Fayol’s 14 principles p35
The Bureaucratic Approach p35
# Fact Description1 Founded by Max Weber2 What he studied The fundamental issue of how organisations are
structured3 Premise Any goal-oriented organisation comprising thousands of
individuals would require the carefully controlled regulation of its activities
4 Problem he addressed
He developed a theory of bureaucratic management that stressed the need for a strictly defined hierarchy, governed by clearly defined regulations and authority
5 Limitations Bureaucratic rigidity results in managers being compensated for doing what they are told to do – not for thinking
Managers are often rewarded for complying with old, outdated rules
Limited organisational flexibility and slow decision-making
6 Belief Weber’s ideal bureaucracy is based on legal authority Legal authority stems from rules and other controls
that govern an organisation in its pursuit of specific goals
Managers are given authority to enforce the rules by virtue of their position
Obedience is not owed to an individual person but to a specific position in the hierarchy of the organisation
Human Relations Movement p36 Grew out of a famous series of studies called the ‘Hawthorne Studies’.
The studies following the ‘Hawthorne Effect’ concluded that group pressure, rather than management demands, had the strongest influence on worker productivity.
In short, workers were more motivated by social needs than economic needs.
# Fact Description1 Founded by Mayo2 What he studied Hawthorne Studies (see above)3 Premise Management’s concern for the well-being of their
subordinates and sympathetic supervision enhances workers’ performance
4 Problem he addressed
Viewed workers as human beings and not as machines
5 Limitations The belief that a happy worker is a productive worker is too simplistic
Economic aspects of work remain important to workers
The human aspect of work is even more complex than originally suggested by the results of the Hawthorne Studies
Many factors play a role in the productivity of workers: their values, attitudes, perceptions, learning, motivation
6 Belief Management’s concern for the well-being of their subordinates and sympathetic supervision enhances workers’ performance
The Quantitative Management Theory p38# Fact Description1 Founded by Not any2 What he studied Management science or operations research3 Premise Management is primarily about crunching the numbers4 Problem he
addressedThe greatest contribution of the techniques (linear programming, PERT/CPM, regression analysis) are in planning and control activities
5 Limitations Many aspects of management decisions cannot be quantified and expressed by means of mathematical symbols and formulae
6 Belief Not addressed in text book7 Focus Deals with mathematical models, statistics, and other
models, and their use in management decision-making
Contemporary Approaches p39
The Systems Approach p39# Fact Description
1 Founded by Ludwig von Bertalanffy2 What he studied Not any3 Premise He noted characteristics common to all sciences:
The study of a whole, or organism The tendency of a system to strive for a steady state
of equilibrium An organism is affected by and affects its
environment and can thus be seen as an open system4 Problem he
addressedViewed an organisation as a group of interrelated parts with a single purpose: to remain in balance (equilibrium)
5 Limitations6 Belief From a systems point-of-view, management should
maintain a balance between the various parts of the organisation, as well as between the organisation and its environment
7 Focus The open system perspective of an organisation is a system that comprises 4 elements: Input – resources Transformation processes – managerial processes,
systems etc. Outputs – products or services Feedback – reaction from the environment
The Contingency Approach p40Based on the systems approach to management:
# Fact Description1 Founded by Not listed in text book2 What he studied Equifinality – there is more than one way to reach the
same goal i.e. different treatments may be available for the same management problem
3 Premise The application of management principles depends on the particular situation that management faces at a given point in time
Emphasises a situational approach (dependent on a specific situation) but not all management situations are unique, so;
The characteristics of a situation are called ‘contingencies’:o The organisation’s external environment - its rate
of change and degree of complexityo The organisation’s own capabilities – its strengths
and weaknesseso Managers and workers – their values, goals, skills,
and attitudeso The technology used by the organisation
4 Problem he addressed
Recognises that every organisation, even every department or unit within an organisation is unique
# Fact Description Every organisation exists in a unique environment
with unique employees and unique goals5 Limitations Not listed in text book6 Belief There is no single best way to manage
Management has to decide whether to use principles of the: scientific, bureaucratic, administrative, behavioural, or quantitative approaches or a combination of these
7 Focus Tries to direct the available techniques and principles of the various approaches to management towards a specific situation in order to realise the goals of the organisation as productively as possible
The manager must learn multiple ways to compete, innovate, and lead
Total Quality Management p42# Fact Description1 Founded by W. Edwards Deming2 What he studied Total: quality involves everyone and all activities in the
organisation;Quality: meeting customers’ agreed requirements, formal and informal, at the lowest cost, first time every time;Management: quality must be managed
3 Premise A well-organised organisation was one in which statistical control reduced variability and resulted in uniform quality and a predictable quantity if output
It is a philosophy of management that is driven by competition and customer needs and expectations
Customer: everyone who interacts with the organisation’s products or services, internally or externally i.e. employees, suppliers and the people who buy the products or services
4 Problem he addressed
Countered the belief that low costs were the only way to increase productivity
5 Limitations Should not be confused with quality control: quality control identifies mistakes that may already have occurred where;
TQM emphasizes actions to prevent mistakes6 Belief A profound knowledge, including an understanding of
a system, statistics, and psychology, is required for the achievement of quality
7 Focus Create an organisation that is committed to continuous improvement
Learn: the principles of TQM p43
Six Sigma p44# Fact Description1 Founded by Motorola in the 1980s2 What he studied3 Premise Six Sigma is a quality initiative that focuses on
defects per million The difference between potential and actual quality is
waste4 Problem he
addressedDesigned to improve manufacturing processes
5 Limitations6 Belief Defined at 3 different levels at Motorola University:
As a metric – 3.4 defects per million opportunities (DPMO)
As a methodology – business improvement methodology that focuses on:
o Understanding and managing customer requirements
o Aligning key business processes to achieve those requirements
o Utilising rigorous data analysis to minimise variation in those processes
o Driving rapid and sustainable improvement to business processes
As a management system7 Focus Focus on improving quality (reducing waste) by
helping organisation to produce products and services better, faster and more cheaply
Focuses on defect prevention, cycle-time reduction, and cost savings
Identifies and eliminates costs that provide no value to customers i.e. wasted costs
Learn: the South African excellence model p45
Six Sigma Management System p46Six Sigma is a high performance system for implementing business strategy. It is a top-down solution to help organisations to:
# Description1 Align their business strategy to critical improvement efforts2 Mobilise teams to attack high-impact projects3 Accelerate improved business results4 Govern efforts to ensure improvements are sustained
DMAIC p46:# Legen
dDescription
D Define Define the goals of the improvement activityM Measur
eMeasure the existing system
A Analyse Analyse the system to identify ways to eliminate the gap between the current performance of the system or process and the desired goal. Statistical tools should be used.
I Improve
Improve the system. Use statistical methods to validate the improvement
C Control Control the new system
Six Sigma Roles and Responsibilities p46:# Legen
dDescription
1 Champions
High-level individuals who understand Six Sigma and are committed to its success
2 Sponsors
Owners of processes and systems who help initiate and coordinate Six Sigma improvement activities in their areas of responsibility
3 Master Black Belt
Highest level of technical and organisational proficiency: provides the technical leadership of the Six Sigma programme
4 Black Belt
Technically oriented individuals held in high regard by their peers. Actively involved in the process of organisational change and development.
5 Green Belt
Six Sigma project leaders capable of forming and facilitating Six Sigma teams and managing Six Sigma projects from concept to completion
Senge’s 7 Organisational Learning Disabilities p47:# Disability1 The delusion of learning from experience2 Generative learning cannot be sustained in an organisation if employees’
thinking is dominated by short-term events. A short-term inclination prohibits creative learning
3 The myth of teamwork4 “I am my position”: when people in organisations focus only on their jobs,
they have little understanding of and sense of responsibility towards the results produced when all jobs interact
5 The enemy is out there6 The illusion of taking charge: often proactiveness is reactiveness in disguise.
True proactiveness comes from seeing how we contribute to our own problems
7 The parable of the boiled frog
Senge’s 5 disciplines that enable us to overcome these disabilities and create new futures for the organisation:
# Discipline1 Becoming committed to lifelong learning2 Challenging one’s own assumptions and generalisations about the
organisation and the world around it: this is essential to becoming a learning individual and a learning organisation
3 Sharing a vision for the organisation4 Encouraging active dialogue in the organisation5 Promoting systems thinking: it is vital that these dsiciplines develop as a unit
Re-engineering p48# Fact Description1 Founded by Hammer and Champy2 What he studied3 Premise Re-engineering considers the entire organisation,
including its suppliers and customers It involves a significant reassessment of what a
particular organisation is all about It entails a fundamental reappraisal of the way that
organisations operate4 Problem he
addressed5 Limitations6 Belief The following 6 conditions are vital for successful re-
engineering:
1. Powerful external forces for change should make change inevitable
2. Vigorous backing from top management3. Focus on the process improvements that
customers really care about and are willing to pay for
4. Thorough knowledge of the needs for customers is essential
5. All major departments effected by the process(es) should be represented on the team
6. Changes in HR programmes and IT should be closely coordinated with the re-engineering effort
7 Focus Re-engineering is constant and relentless in its focus on integrating 4 key drivers:
1. People2. Process3. Technology4. Infrastructure
Current and Near Future Management Realities p49 The new source of sustainable competitive advantage available to
organisations has people at its centre- their knowledge, creativity, and talent Capital and technological advantages can be emulated by competitors, but
the human asset is intangible and very difficult to imitate
The fact that the new competitive advantage lies in the human assets of organisations poses unprecedented challenges to the modern manager. Managing this source of competitive advantage requires that managers thoroughly grasp:
# Grasp1 How the current and near-future environments differ from previous ones2 How today’s organisations differ from previous ones3 The impact of both of the above on management
Corruption is a major problem in Africa, it undermines development by:
# Corruption1 Raising transaction costs2 Increasing uncertainty3 Promoting bribery4 Often results in capital outflows as this money is forwarded to foreign bank
accounts
The types of environments p50:
# Environment Description1 Evolutionary Predictable
Change gradually which makes it possible to predict trends
2 Revolutionary Unpredictable Drastic change aka discontinuous change Forecasting becomes impossible in these types of
environments
Scenario development is the visualisation of alternative futures.
Other types of management:
# Type of Management
Description
1 Cross-boundary management
Managers need to be able to assess the implications of their decisions on different people, processes, systems, and so on that make up the organisation
2 Interim management
Ensuring that the best manager manages specific projects
# Type of Management
Description
This means that the workforce of organisations will be in constant flux (it is also known as transient or journey management)
CH3 Managing in a Changing Environment p57Introduction p58Managers cannot manage their organisations effectively if they do not p60:
Understand the relationship between the organisation and its environment The threats and opportunities that exist in the environment The trends that appear and disappear How all of these form part of a broad environmental system
Concepts of Systems Theory p61The Organisation as a Sub-System of its Environment p61# Study Note1 A system can be defined as a set of interrelated elements (sub-systems)
functioning as a whole2 A business organisation is a system that operates in a specific environment3 Business organisations are not self-sufficient, nor are they self-contained4 They exchange resources with and are dependent upon the external
environment in which they operate5 The organisation and its environment depend on each other for survival
Learn Figure 3.2: A systems perspective of an organisation p61
A business organisation obtains resources or inputs from the environment in the form of:
# Resource or Input1 People (labour)2 Physical resources (raw materials)3 Capital (financial resources)4 Information (knowledge and expertise)
The transformation process – the activity of processing inputs from the environment into products and services for the environment – constitutes the field of study of management. This transformation process is carried out by the organisation as a specific sub-system of its environment.
The Systems Approach in Management p61There are 4 basic concepts that must be understood when explaining systems theory and presenting the business organisation as an interdependent system:
# Concept
1 An open system (as opposed to a closed system)2 Sub-systems3 Synergy4 Entropy – the process of systems disintegration
More about systems:
# Concept1 A system is closed when it is self-supporting and can exist independently of
a particular environment2 A system is open if:
It is dependent on the environment in which it operates The environment is dependent on the system There is a specific interaction between system and environment
3 A sub-system is a system within a system e.g. the marketing, operations, human resources and finance functions in an organisation
The particular value of the systems approach is that it emphasizes the fact that the activities in one part of an organisation affect the activities in other parts.
Synergy is another concept of the systems theory:
# Concept1 The whole is greater than the sum of its parts – the individual sub-systems
are simultaneously applied in such a way that the result of their simultaneous application is greater than the sum of their individual efforts
The Composition of the Management/Business Environment p63Learn Figure 3.3: The composition of the management environment p64
# Study Note1 The management environment is defined as all those factors or variables,
both inside and outside the organisation, that may influence the continued and successful existence of the organisation
2 The business environment comprises the: Macro-environment (external environment) Market environment (external environment) Micro-environment (internal environment)
The micro-environment p63:
# Study Note1 The key variables in this environment include:
The vision, mission, and goals Organisation strategies Various management functions The organisation’s resources The organisation’s employees and organisational culture
2 Management primary task in this environment: To identify the strengths and weaknesses of the business organisation
The market-environment (or task environment) p63:
# Study Note1 Surrounds the organisation2 The key variables in this environment include:
Consumers – needs, preferences, purchasing power, behaviour Suppliers – supply of products, raw materials, services and even
finance Intermediaries – compete to distribute an organisation’s product or its
competitors Competitors – established (as well as new and potential) and wish to
maintain or improve their position Labour unions – deal with the supply of labour
3 Management primary task in this environment: Identify, evaluate, and utilise opportunities in the market Minimise threats Develop its strategy in such a way that it can deal with competition in
that industry
The macro-environment p65:
# Study Note1 Exists outside of the organisation and the market environment2 It comprises 6 distinct sub-environments (aka the PESTIE environment):
The political environment – the government, political involvement, and legislation
The economic environment – inflation, recession, exchange rates, monetary and fiscal policy
The social environment – lifestyles, urbanisation, habits, values, culture
The technological environment – responsible for the pace of innovation of change (includes infrastructure)
The international environment The ecological environment – natural resources, flaura and fauna,
mineral resources, access to water, quality of air etc.
Main Characteristics of the Management/Business Environment p65# Characteristic1 The interrelatedness of environmental factors or variables2 Increasing instability3 Environmental uncertainty – this is a function of the amount of info
available as well as the confidence that management has in that info4 The complexity of the environment – relates to the number of external
variables to which the organisation must react as well as fluctuations in the variables themselves
5 The environment is becoming unpredictable
The Internal or Micro-Environment p66# Study Note1 Internal environment: main environment in which management operates i.e.
plan, organise, lead, control2 The internal environment can be described in terms of the organisation’s:
Functional departments (finance, operations etc.) Resources (human, financial, physical, information) Value-chain (primary and secondary activities)
3 The 2 different ways of looking at the internal environment: A structure that comprises functional departments An environment that comprises the resources
4 The value-chain approach – a chain of activities that must be performed to create a product or service, according to this approach an organisation comprises:
Primary activities Secondary activities
The Market or Task Environment p67# Study Note1 This is the environment that immediately surrounds the organisation, it
comprises the: Market Suppliers Intermediaries Competitors Substitute products Possible new entrants Labour unions
The Market p68Changes in in markets are influenced directly by the variables in the macro-environment:
# Environment Description1 Demographic
trendsAffect the number of consumers
2 Economic factors Determine the purchasing power3 Cultural values Exert particular influences on the purchasing behaviour
of consumers
Intermediaries p69# Study Note1 Creates the utilities of: place, time and ownership2 Wholesalers, retailers, commercial agents, brokers, spaza shops3 Financial intermediaries
Competitors p70# Study Note1 Competition can be defined as a situation in the market environment in
which different organisations with more or less the same product or service compete for the business patronage of the same consumers
2 Competition ensures: Excessive profits are kept in check Incentives are provided for higher productivity Technological innovation is encouraged
3 The nature and intensity of competition in a particular market are determined by 5 forces:
The threat of new entrants (competitors) or competitors departing The bargaining power of clients and consumers The bargaining power of suppliers The threat of substitute products or services The number of existing competitors
4 Management must be sensitive to trends in the market environment to enable it to make the most of opportunities and to avoid possible threats timeously – the tools that management should use for this purpose are:
Environmental scanning Information management
Learn Figure 3.6: Competitive forces in an industry p71
The Macro-Environment p71The Composition of the Macro-Environment p71# Study Note1 Represent the uncontrollable environmental force, or “megatrends”2 The 6 variables, called “PESTIE”:
Political Economic
# Study Note Social Technological (includes infrastructure i.e. roads, bridges etc.) International Ecological
The Technological Environment P72# Study Note1 Refers to the knowledge of how to do something2 The most basic effect of technological innovation is productivity which
results in keener competition3 Superior management of technology and innovation within the organisation
can be an important source of competitive advantage4 The technological environment should be assessed continuously, this
includes: Identification of important technologies and technological trends both
inside and outside the industry Analysis of potential change in important current and future
technologies Analysis of the competitive impact of important technologies Analysis of the organisation’s technological strengths and weaknesses A list of priorities which should be included in a technology strategy
for the organisation
The Economic Environment P73# Study Note1 The economy is influenced by changes in:
Technology Politics Ecology Social International environment
2 These cross influences constantly cause changes in: Economic growth rate Levels of employment Consumer income Rate of inflation Exchange rate The general state of the economy
The Socio-Cultural Environment P74# Study Note1 This is the environmental variable that is most sensitive to cross-influences
by other variables, especially technology and economy2 Culture - the same total of the way of life of a group of people – influences
an individual’s lifestyle
# Study Note3 Culture is not homogeneous, there are numerous sub-cultures based on:
Nationality Religion Population group Geographical area
4 An organisation is at the centre of social change
The Ecological/Natural Environment p76# Study Note1 The ecological or physical environment contains the limited natural
resources from which an organisation obtains its raw materials2 Threats include:
A shortage of resources The rising cost of energy The cost of pollution Damage to a country’s natural resources
The Political Environment p76# Study Note1 It influences the organisation primarily as a regulating force2 Other influences include:
Annual budget Taxation Import control (or lack of it) Promotion of exports Import tariffs to protect certain industries against excessive foreign
intervention Price control in respect of certain goods and services The marketing of agricultural products Health regulations and incentives
Interfaces Between the Organisation and the Environment p78Uncertainty in the Environment p79# Study Note1 An organisation’s environment can be studies from 2 perspectives:
The extent of change – the degree of stability or instability The level of complexity – depends on the number of variables
Learn Figure 3.7: Environmental change and uncertainty p80
Ways in Which Management Can Prepare for Environmental Changes p81# Study Note1 The response to environmental change revolves mainly around:
Environmental scanning Information management
2 Responses to change: Managing information Strategic responses Structural change
Information management p81:
# Study Note1 An organisation’s information management system should make adequate
provision for environmental scanning2 The importance of environmental scanning:
The environment is changing constantly Determine whether factors in the environment constitute a threat to
the organisation’s mission, goals, and strategy Determine if the factors in the environment offer opportunities
3 The extent of environmental scanning is determined by: The nature of the environment in which an organisation operates and
the demands the environment makes on it The basic relationship that an organisation has with its environment The source and extent of change will influence the degree of
meaningful scanning
CH4 Strategic Planning p89Introduction p90
The strategic plan provides focus to all other plans It states the direction that the organisation has chosen for its future as well
as its gameplan (strategy) It is built around the organisation’s unique strengths; and minimises the
weaknesses It deals with major opportunities and threats
Strategic Planning: What it Encompasses p91Learn Figure 4.2: The strategic management process (planning, implementation and control) p93
Strategic planning can be defined as the process of proactively aligning the organisation’s resources (internal environment) with threats and opportunities caused by changes in the external environment.
Strategic planning deals with:
# Study Note1 An environment that is constantly changing2 An organisation that needs to be flexible to adapt to these changes3 Strategies to align the organisation with the changing environment
Strategic planning has some unique characteristics p92:
# Study Note1 It is an ongoing activity (a process)2 Requires well-developed conceptual skills and is performed mainly by top
management3 Focuses on the organisation as a whole4 It is future oriented5 It is concerned with the organisation’s vision, mission, long-term goals, and
strategies6 Aims at integrating all management functions7 Focuses on opportunities that may be exploited, or threats that may be dealt
with
Corporate strategy p93:
# Study Note1 The corporate strategy, also called the ‘grand strategy’ is the course charted
# Study Notefor an organisation as a whole
2 It specifies which set of businesses the organisation should be in and in which markets it intends to compete
3 The corporate strategy decision is driven by ‘synergy’, which means that at corporate level strategists will look for a set of business organisations that produces an effect greater than the sum of the individual businesses
So, in a nutshell, strategies are formulated at p94:
# Strategy1 Corporate level2 Business level3 Functional level
The Strategic Planning Process p95The components of the strategic planning process p95:
# Strategy1 The vision2 The mission statement3 Assessing the internal environment4 The external environment5 Translating the mission into long-term goals6 Choosing a strategy
The Vision p95# Study Note1 The vision should provide a clear sense of what the organisation hopes to
become2 When formulating a vision statement, the means should not be confused
with the end3 Stakeholders with whom the vision statement should be shared:
Shareholders Employees Customers Suppliers The community The government
4 A clear vision is important for the following reasons: It portrays the dream that the organisation has for the future It promotes change – it serves as a roadmap and as a vehicle for
driving change It provides the basis for a strategic plan It enhances a wide range of performance measures It helps to keep decision-making in context – it can affect the
# Study Noteperspectives and premises that people use to make decisions in the absence of direct supervision
It motivates individuals and facilitates the recruitment of talent It has positive consequences such as: higher level of job satisfaction,
commitment, loyalty, pride, esprit de corps, clarity about values, productivity, and encouragement
The Mission Statement p96# Study Note1 The vision statement is the dream; the mission statement deals with reality
(and it is a strategic tool when used properly)2 The mission statement aligns the organisation with its dreams in terms of –
the core components of any mission statement: Products (what is our business?) Market (who is our customer?) Technology (how will we provide this product or service to our
customer?)3 A mission statement should state what makes an organisation unique and
therefore provide the organisation with a competitive edge i.e. unanimity of purpose
4 It serves as the basis for resource allocation because it states management’s priorities and focus areas
5 It sets the parameters within which all decisions should be made6 Other components of the mission statement, also referred to as the
‘philosophy’ of the organisation: Concern for survival, growth, profitability (concern for financial
soundness) Philosophy (values, ethics, and beliefs of the organisation) Public image (social responsibility) Employees and all other stakeholders Distinctive competence (how is the organisation different from or
better than its competitors?)7 The mission statement as a strategic tool:
Top management must make the mission statement a living document
Key performance areas (KPA) for the whole organisation must be stated clearly - all management levels and functional areas must be involved in the formulation of the mission statement
Get buy-in from everyone (should happen automatically if the above is in place)
KPAs must be cascaded down to all managers and employees – if each individual achieves his/her goals then the organisation will achieve its goals
The 3 types of values when writing a mission statement p98:
# Study Note1 Business-focused values – acceptable behaviour in terms of efficiency,
planning, productivity, responsibility2 People-focused values – honesty, respect, trust, listening, openness3 Development-focused
Assessing the Internal Environment p99:# Study Note1 To ensure that the mission statement is realistic, management must:
Evaluate the organisation’s (internal) capabilities (strengths and weaknesses) as well as;
The opportunities and threats posed by the changing external environment
2 The end result of an internal environmental assessment is called the organisational profile – this profile depicts the strategically important strengths and weaknesses on which the organisation should base its strategy
3 The 3 step process of internal analysis: Identify strategic internal factors – key aspects of capabilities,
limitations and characteristics Evaluate strategic internal factors Develop input for the strategic planning process
Step 1: Identify Strategic Internal Factors p99# Study Note1 The 5 approaches to determining an organisation’s strengths and
weaknesses (internal assessment): The evaluation of functional segments – refer Table 4.1: The
development of an organisational profile p101 The value-chain approach:
o Looks at an organisation as a chain of activities that transforms inputs into outputs that customers value
o It surveys the costs across the series of activities (see below) that the organisation performs in order to determine where the organisation how low-cost advantages or high-cost disadvantages
o The value chain distinguishes between 2 types of activities: Primary activities – those activities involved in the
physical production (or delivery) of the product (or services)
Secondary activities – provide the infrastructure that allow the primary activities to take place e.g. general admin, human resources management, research and development, technology, procurement etc.
o Differentiation and response time can be used instead of cost analysis e.g. excellent customer service is a differentiating factor
# Study Note The resource-based view (RBV) – see below p102 The product/market evolution – based on product lifecycle p103 Using financial analysis – based on past data using the balance
sheet and income statement, the key financial ratios are:o Liquidity – the ability of an organisation to meet its short-term
objectiveso Leverage – looks at the source of an organisation’s capitalo Activity – looks at how well an organisation is using its
resources Profitability – measure how well an organisation is managed
Learn Figure 4.7: The value-chain approach to internal assessment p102 (same as FTI) *personal note
The Resource-Based View (RBV) of an Organisation p102
# Study Note1 According to the RBV of an organisation, there are 3 types of resources:
Tangible assets – found on an organisation’s balance sheet e.g. property and warehouses
Intangible assets – cannot see or touch but are critical to creating competitive advantage e.g. brand names, patents, knowledge of the market
Organisational capabilities – the ability of an organisation to turn inputs into outputs
2 For a resource to be valuable (a strength) to a company it must be: Superior to the resources of competitors e.g. a better location Scarce so that competitors struggle to get hold of the resource Difficult to imitate e.g. a view over the ocean Under the control of management Slow to depreciate Difficult to substitute
3 The hierarchy of resources p103: Strategic/competitive resources – the unique resources or capabilities
of an organisation that cannot be easily emulated by its competitors Base resources – those resources that an organisation cannot operate
without Peripheral resources – necessary resources but can easily be
outsourced
Step 2: Evaluate Strategic Internal Factors p104# Study Note1 Yardsticks that management can use to determine whether an internal
factor is a strength or a weakness: A comparison with the organisation’s performance in the past A comparison with competitors
# Study Note A comparison with industry ratios Benchmarking – the search for the best practices among competitors
and non-competitors that lead to their superior performance
Step 3: Develop Input for the Strategic Planning Process p106The results of step 1 and 2could be applied to determine those internal factors that:
# Study Note1 Provide an organisation with an edge over its competitors2 Are important capabilities for the organisation to have but are typical of
every competitor in the industry3 Are currently weaknesses in the organisation
The External Environment p106# Study Note1 This uncontrollable macro-environment consists of the PESTIE
environment: Political – environmental protection laws, tax laws, special incentives Economic – economic cycle, inflation, interest rates, unemployment
levels Social – quality of life, life expectancy, population growth, gap
between rich and poor, urbanisation, career expectations of the population
Technological International Ecological
2 The market environment factors include: Competitors Customers Suppliers Potential entrants Substitute products
3 The steps in environmental forecasting p108: Monitor forecasts Develop an environmental profile - a summary of the key
environmental factors evaluated for their potential impact on the organisation
Evaluate forecasting techniques Select sources of information Select critical environmental variables Monitor
Scenario planning is a tool used for creating these futures p110 – they can be built as follows:
# Study Note1 Determine which decisions will make or break the organisation in the next
few years2 Put together an information gathering network that focuses on forces most
likely to have a significant impact on the organisation3 Sketch ‘what if’ scenarios that deal with the most influential external forces
in the environment – limit the number of scenarios to 3: worst case, status quo, fundamentally better
4 Access the implications of each scenario5 Identify signs which could indicate that a particular scenario is materialising6 Reassess your company’s vision in the light of the scenarios
Translating the Mission into Long Term Goals p110The Balanced Scorecard (BSC) is used for this purpose. When fully deployed, the BSC transforms strategic planning from a conceptual exercise into the nerve centre of an organisation.
The 4 BSC perspectives measure the following:
# Study Note1 Financial perspective – operating income, return on capital employed and
economic value added2 Customer perspective – number of new customers, customer retention,
customer defection and customer satisfaction3 Internal business processes – continuous improvement, throughput and
quality e.g. number of mistakes made during a certain process, and number of new processes incorporated in last year
4 Learning and growth – competency of employees, innovative ideas generated by employees and managers, and staff retention
Kaplan and Norton (created a tool called ‘strategy maps’) argue that you can’t measure what you can’t describe, and that sustained value creation depends on managing 4 key internal processes:
# Study Note1 Operations2 Customer relationships3 Innovation4 Regulatory and social processes
Choosing a Strategy p111When choosing a strategy, strategic planners decide on a core idea about how the organisation can best compete in the marketplace – this core idea is called the ‘generic strategy’.
# Study Note1 There are 3 types of generic strategy:
Low-cost leadership Differentiation Focus
2 The low-cost leadership strategy: Maximises sales by minimising costs per unit and hence prices Several things can be done to minimise costs:
o The ‘learning curve’ or the ‘experience curve’o Economy of scale – as size increases so cost per unit decreases
because the fixed costs are shared with the larger number of products
3 The differentiation strategy: An organisation can charge higher prices for a product that customers
perceive to be different Differentiation may be in terms of:
o Qualityo The production processo Designo Reputationo Friendliness to the environment
Grand Strategies p113Learn Figure 4.11: Grand Strategies p114 (good diagram)
# Study Note1 When summarised they are:
Growth strategies – internal growth strategies and external growth strategies
Decline strategies Corporate combination strategies
2 Growth strategies p114: Internal growth strategies - low in risk – organisation keeps its
focus on what it does well:o Concentration growth strategy – ‘sticking to the knitting’
i.e. concentrating on improving what the organisation is already doing
o Market development – sell products in new markets by opening additional new outlets or attracting other market segments
o Product development - modification or additions to existing products
# Study Noteo Innovation – the search for continual and novel ideas, more
risky than above strategies External growth strategies – higher risk:
o Integration: Backward vertical integration – increased control of
supply sources e.g. Sappi Forward vertical integration – acquisition of a business
nearer to the ultimate consumer e.g. paper producer buying a bookstore
Horizontal integration – long-term strategy in which one or more organisations are taken over for reasons such as scale-of-operations benefits or a larger market share
o Diversification: The reasons for an organisation to diversify include:
The markets of current businesses are approaching the saturation or decline phase of the product life cycle
Risk can be distributed more evenly Current businesses are generating excess cash
that can be invested more profitable elsewhere Synergy is possible when diversifying into new
businesses Concentric diversification p117 – the addition of a
business related to an organisation in terms of technology, markets, or products (the core components of a mission statement) e.g. Nandos’ selling tis sauces in Checkers
Conglomerate diversification – seeking growth by acquiring a business because it represents the most promising investment opportunity available
3 Decline strategies p117 – when an organisation needs to (1) refocus its activities in order to remain profitable by cutting costs; (2) where long-run growth and profit opportunities are unavailable; (3) where other opportunities are more attractive; (4) where there is a period of economic uncertainty:
Turnaround – eliminate inefficiencies, cost and asset reduction Divestiture – involves the sale of a business or a major component of
it Harvesting – short-term strategy Liquidation
4 Turnaround is used when some of these factors are present: Poor management Inadequate financial control Price and product competition High cost structure Change in the pattern of demand
5 Corporate combination strategies p118: Joint ventures (JV) – long-term
# Study Note Strategic alliances – time limited e.g. Protea Hotels and Budget Car
Rental – the advantages:o Growth through expansiono Sharing of technical and operational know howo More time for each partner to focus on its core businesso Cost reduction
Mergers – total pooling of resources Acquisitions – when one organisation takes over another and clearly
establishes itself as the new owner – the advantages (same for merger):
o Staff reductionso Economies of scaleo Access to new technologyo Higher sales and visibility in the industry
The Selection of Grand Strategies p119The grand strategy selection process:
Evaluate the selected strategy Select a grand strategy Conduct a portfolio analysis Identify the present grand strategy
There are many different approaches to portfolio management, we focus on the Boston Consulting Group growth/share matrix (BCG):
# Study Note1 Each of the organisation’s strategic business units (SBUs) is plotted
according to its: Market growth rate (percentage growth in sales) Relative competitive position (market share)
2 Learn Figure 4.14: The Boston Consulting Group growth/share matrix p121
3 Business are classified as: Stars – businesses in rapidly growing markets with large market
shares, require substantial investment Cash cows – low market growth but high market share Question marks – high growth, low share SBUs, require a lot of cash
to maintain Dogs – low market share and low growth i.e. saturated market with
intense competition and low profit margins
Factors Affecting Strategic Choice p122# Study Note1 Corporate governance – the triple bottom line (economic, environment,
social2 Previous strategies chosen3 Dependence on external factors4 Attitude towards risk5 Personalities of strategists6 Alignment with the organisation’s mission and long-term goals7 Proper timing
Mintzberg research suggests that: past strategy strongly influences current strategy – the older and more successful a strategy is, the harder it is to replace – even when it begins to fail.